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Aggettivo sostantivo / adjective noun.

Any adjective can be substantiated, that is, used as a noun.

Often this noun serves to make the expression more fluent.

  • Ha cinque figli, tre sposati e due scapoli (invece di: tre figli sposati e due scapoli).
  • He has five children, three married and two bachelors (instead of: three married children and two bachelors).
  • Aveva le mani impegnate: nella sinistra teneva dei fogli, nella destra penna e matita.
  • His hands were full: in his left hand, he held some paper, in his right hand a pen and pencil.

There are noun adjectives that are now used only as nouns:

  • Il giornale, il mobile, la capitale, ecc.
  • The newspaper, the mobile, the capital, etc.

The adjective noun in the masculine singular has an abstract meaning:

  • Il bello, il buono, il giusto, il pubblico, il privato…
  • The beautiful, the good, the right, the public, the private…

Verbal phrases are very frequent:

1. Il bello / il brutto / lo strano / l’assurdo / il difficile è che …

The good / the bad / the strange / the absurd / the difficult is that…

  • Il bello è che ti sto a sentire!
  • The best part is that I’m listening to you!

2. Il bello / il brutto / lo strano / l’assurdo / il difficile è + infinito.

The beautiful / the ugly / the strange / the absurd / the difficult is + infinite.

  • Lo strano per me è non aver sentito niente.
  • The strange thing for me is that I didn’t hear anything.

The plural (masculine or feminine) mostly refers to categories of people.

  • I ricchi e i poveri, le bionde e le brune, gli sfrattati, i disoccupati, i verdi, ecc.
  • The rich and the poor, the blondes and the brunettes, the evicted, the unemployed, the greens, etc.

The possessive, in the plural, indicates the family or the parents alone:

  • I miei, i tuoi , i suoi (familiari, parenti, genitori).
  • Mine, yours, his (family members, relatives, parents).
  • I suoi sono al mare.
  • His parents are at the seaside.

As regards the names of peoples, the masculine plural refers to the population:

  • Gli Inglesi, i Tedeschi, ecc.
  • The English, the Germans, etc.

Instead, the masculine singular refers to the language or to an individual of a nation:

  • Lui parla l’inglese e il tedesco.
  • He speaks English and German.
  • Un inglese è diverso da un francese, ecc.
  • An Englishman is different from a Frenchman, etc.